16 victims in HCV outbreak in Utah hospitals so far

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Image: Kiedove

Another new drug diversion case: 

Released 4/4/16 Click to read.

 

The good news is that free testing has been conducted on more than half of those receiving letters.  So far, 37 HCV cases with other genotypes have been identified; 7 others are waiting genotyping.  These cases, while not part of the nurse/hospital outbreak, are now informed of their status.

“This investigation should show Utah residents their public health system is serving them well,” said Dr. Angela Dunn, a CDC epidemiologist stationed at the UDOH. “By partnering with the two hospitals we were able to identify an infectious health care worker, establish that the worker may have exposed patients, test those patients, and provide them with testing results. Everyone working on this outbreak should be proud of these accomplishments.”

When the legal actions take place, we’ll learn about how the actual contamination took place (LINK TO TV VIDEO).  These civilian cases show how easily, even in “state-of-the-art” facilities with modern “standard precautions,” HCV can spread exponentially via contact with the infected blood from only one person.

 

Posted in HCV Risks (documented), Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

BVA–THE NEW PRESUMPTIVES FROM CAMP OF THE YOUNG

From the Al Unser Memorial Fort Fumble in Albuquerque, New Mexico:

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The NM Puzzle Palace

Camp Le Jeune, if spelled correctly, is French as most know. By rights, when named, it would have been more appropriate to call it Camp pour le jeune fils translated as Camp for the Young Men. How the Frogs managed to plant their flag in North Carolina or why the Marines would ever bite on that one is a mystery for the ages considering they didn’t much cotton to them fellers from Tripoli.

As most know in our line of work, Camp Lejeune has less than perfect groundwater due to the military’s penchant for pecunious overpurchasing of chemicals and their equally penurious proclivity for disposal of same. Over a thirty year span, unscrupulous folks purportedly dumped vast quantities of really nasty chemicals down the tubes and then proceeded to deny Veterans’ claims of injury due to cancer. Eventually, science caught up with the disease process and it became painfully obvious another Agent Orange “event” was brewing. Ruh-oh Rorge. Generally speaking, when this happens, the EPA is less than enthusiastic about declaring it a Superfund site. They would a) prefer it go away; b) the Govt. just settle and get out of it or c) let the VA play with it for about 50 years like AO. News flash. Option C is now in effect.

With no manual on how to construct a viable denial process, they turned to the Nehmer protocols and tried valiantly to limit the number of diseases covered and the scope of  who, exactly, qualified. Instead of permitting a truly presumptive “I was there in 1967 so therefore my breast cancer was caused by it” rationale, the VA has striven to obfuscate, demand proof of “boobs on the ground” and required true Independent Medical Opinions (IMOs) to support any grants. Consequently, very few have been successful yet. As most in the Veteran legal profession are also aware, very few of those denied have the stamina or physical constitution to continue the fight-especially assuming it is a futile endeavour where a monolithic entity as enormous as the government is concerned. It’s true. Every year, Veterans file 1.4 million claims against the VA for service-connected injuries. 15% are granted leaving 85% denied. Of those 85%, fewer than 12 % choose to appeal their denials. I submit that the claims were not frivolous in the first instance. Many feel they have given it their best shot after being cajoled into it by the local VSO. Here’s the story on one of our sisters who chose to stand and fight. Your’re gonna like this Marine Gal.

Meet Jane Vet. This being a BVA decision, it will not reveal her identity further than being a resident of the great state of New Mexico- the one that has so much background radiation from Sandia’s Labs that it glows in the dark. Janebo signed up at the height of the Vietnam war in 1967 in what, as a woman, can only be perceived as a truly patriotic gesture. That she chose the Marines indicates she actually wanted to be more than just “all you can be”.  She wanted to be a MARINE. By reading the decision, her subsequent marriage to a fellow Marine is further proof of her commitment to America’s continued freedom and a strong vein of patriotism. From what I’ve heard,  being a Marine and marrying a Marine is a very difficult, unrewarding task from a female spousal perspective.

Here’s what Jane was up against when she filed way back in late 2010:

The National Academy of Sciences’ National Research Council (NRC) published its report, “Contaminated Water Supplies at Camp Lejeune, Assessing Potential Health Effects,” in 2009. This report included a review of studies addressing exposure to TCE and PCE, as well as a mixture of the two, and a discussion of disease manifestations potentially associated with such exposure. Fourteen diseases were identified as having limited/suggestive evidence of an association with TCE, PCE, or a solvent mixture exposure. These include esophageal cancer, lung cancer, breast cancer, bladder cancer, kidney cancer, adult leukemia, multiple myeloma, myelodisplastic syndromes, renal toxicity, hepatic steatosis, female infertility, miscarriage with exposure during pregnancy, scleroderma, and neurobehavioral effects. See VBA Manual M21-1, IV.ii.1.L.15.a., Appendix B (2015). The list of 14 diseases in this NRC report is not an exhaustive list, however.

Clearly, the NAS and it’s research arm (NRC) conceded breast cancer was a possibility but that wasn’t enough for VA. Much like our endless efforts to show Hepatitis C is almost a foregone conclusion from jetguns, the VA is adding a new layer of “proof” that these chemicals specifically affected the afflicted individual. Her testimony was credible once it was finally allowed to be entered into the record. That little brain fart by the wunderkind raters at the Albuquerque RO cost her of several years while waiting on a remand back from the BVA to get her requested hearing. Imagine if she was asking for TDIU? I can almost guarantee her c-file would be bereft of any SSI/SSD folder.

 

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Not Jane Vet but an expression of what she undoubtedly endured

Now allow me to show you just how biased the “independent process” is in obtaining nexus information on any given disease/ injury. To begin with, let’s look at the idiot’s delight syndrome every VSO engages in. Fully well knowing since Mario Caluza’s misadventures in Manila back in 1994, that a real connection between an event in service and a present disease is a prerequisite for service connection, Jane’s DAV service representative blithely allowed her to go to her claims demise with no IMO. On appeal, she was beginning to get the hang of it and talked her doctor into a “pseudo” nexus that had a few too many “could of’s or ‘would of’s and “it can’t not be said with any certainty that the barkwater wasn’t the root cause of the boob cancer”. Won’t work. Too equivocal.

 

She decided to respond to the VA examiner’s “non-nexus” that basically blew bubbles and punted:

The Veteran was afforded a VA examination in September 2010. The examiner stated that he was unable to opine regarding whether the Veteran’s breast cancer was due to exposure to contaminated drinking water while stationed at Camp Lejeune without resort to mere speculation.

This is against the law in 56 VAROs so I’m not sure how anyone could use this for denial purposes.  To her credit, she marched smartly in to see her VA doctor and get his opinion.

The Veteran submitted a September 2010 letter from her VA treating oncologist, E.M., M.D., Hematology/Oncology Section Chief, in support of her claim. Dr. E.M. states that, according to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), reported problems associated with exposure to the chemicals found in the water at Camp Lejeune include breast cancer. Dr. E.M. also cited the results of a study that confirm findings from a prior study and “suggest that women with the highest PCE exposure levels have a small to moderate increased risk of breast cancer.” Dr. E.M. opined that, while it cannot be said with certainty what caused the Veteran’s cancer, “it is not unreasonable to assume that [the Veteran’s] exposure to TCE and PCE while stationed at Camp Lejeune was a contributing factor to [her] current breast cancer diagnosis.”

It’s clear that the good VA doctor loved his patient but was not prepared to go out on the little branches and state with any certainty that “It is more likely than less likely that the current breast cancer  Miz Jane suffers is a direct cause of the water she ingested at Camp Lejeune”. It might have cost him his job and he knew it. More recently (2011) the VBA has forbidden this practice so he’s substantially protected against it ever  happening again.

In response, VA promptly (five months) countered with their usual lunacy. What I find interesting is the depths the next VA Examiner went in researching Jane’s family history of breast cancer (or lack thereof). It’s a given that witch hunts in this endeavour are strictly prohibited and any information must be derived from the evidence of record. That means they industriously reviewed her entrance SF 88 exam to find any mention of cancer of any flavor. I’d also have the reader and attorneys look at the extraneous extension of logic that the M 21’s parameters for breast cancer only extend to male recruits. Ahhruu? as Tim Allen might opine. Male breast cancer? Most Veterans’ advocates fail to recognize the M 21 is merely a guide to adjudications as opposed to a regulation or statute. I severely doubt the new statute on the correlation between TCE, say, and breast cancer, states unequivocally that they are only referring to male breast cancer. Boy howdy, I’d pay good money for a ringside seat to see the the expression on Meg Bartley’s or Saint Mary’s face if they had occasion to read that in the ROA.

An additional medical opinion was obtained from a VA physician in March 2011. After reviewing the Veteran’s claims file and Dr. E.M.’s letter, the physician opined that the Veteran’s breast cancer was less likely than not related to contaminated drinking water at Camp Lejeune. The physician explained that the Veteran had been taking estrogen for at least five years before being diagnosed with cancer, and her tumor was strongly positive for estrogen receptors. In addition, the Veteran had other risk factors for breast cancer, including not breast feeding and having a positive family history of colon and pancreatic cancer, which increase the risk of breast cancer.

The physician continued that updated information from December 2010 states that the concern about increased risk for breast cancer due to contaminated water at Camp Lejeune is for males.

The physician noted that there still are no long-term studies proving a connection between exposure to contaminated water at Camp Lejeune and breast cancer, and that the NRC reported there is no sufficient evidence to prove a link.

To her credit, I wish to personally thank Veterans Law Judge Tanya Smith for having the intestinal fortitude to countermand this stupidity afoot at the New Mexico Institute for the Terminally Deluded.  Being a newbie, I wonder how long her objectivity will endure before being supplanted with derision for the Veterans’ plight. Hopefully, never.

I encountered this Catch 22 in Nehmer first in 1994 when I approached the AmVets VSO and said innocently “I have porphyria cutanea tarda (pct)and I’ve had it since I was in Laos in 1970. The chloracne resolved about ten years ago.” He countered with “Yes, but has it (pct) been compensable since a year after you left(1973)?” We encounter these aberrations in the Nehmer and Camp Lejeune rules.  Seriously. How about the  AO one that dealt with subacute peripheral neuropathy. You had to come down with it within a year of leaving the land of the red clay but… it had to resolve within three years or no dinero. In my case, I had to somehow prove a disease I (and most doctors) had no name for (or even heard of outside the walls of the Tennessee Monsanto Factory) was compensable to a degree of 10% or more within one year of departing Vietnam and its environs -or May 1973. Lay testimony would not suffice. I didn’t even know about the applicability of combat presumptions under 1154(b). All I knew was I wasn’t going to be seeing any backsheesh because I failed to go to a doctor and have him annotate it in my records.

The biggest takeaway from this for advocates is the obvious written one. It’s a presumptive which means the requirements for acceptance of the possibility the disease was contracted at Camp Lejeune are substantially reduced. Jane’s treating VA doctor’s IMO emcompassed that presumptive in assuming it was possible which is more probative than the VA examiner’s rebuttal that gave no credence to the presumptive nature nor a rebuttal of substance to the cited articles by her doctor- a specialist in oncology. The argument in presumptive cases is almost always one of the VA rebutting the presumptive nature with evidence that conclusively proves it has a different proven etiology-otherwise, the Vet wins. Here, the VA has promulgated that 14 diseases are presumed to be involved in exposure to solvents. If Jane was there and has one of the diseases, VA must prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that Jane’s Boob boo was caused by not nursing with documented, peer-reviewed studies that are in general circulation and accepted as bedrock medical fact.

Absent that, Jane wins. That’s the way presumptives work. That’s why Congress invented them. VA never has managed to get a mental handle on the concept. (“What do you mean they get a bye on Parkinson’s? That’s bogus!”)

I just had to put this decision up when I spotted the Trix©  “Silly Rabbit. Breast cancer is for males.” blurb. It makes me seriously wonder what’s in the water in Albuquerque’s RO.

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Posted in All about Veterans, BvA Decisions, Camp Lejeune poisoning, IMOs/IMEs, KP Veterans, M-21 info, Medical News, Nexus Information, Presumption of Soundness, Tips and Tricks, Veterans Law | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

UTUBE MEETS PHOTOSHOP AND WE WIN

CaptureThis is priceless. If Kiedove is going to jump in with a political theme, I promise I will only offer suitable entertainment that is G-rated to counterbalance her thrust. Imagine the effort involved to create this and you have to compliment the progenitor(s). What the hey? I don’t care if it came out of Trump’s Ars Gratia Artis barn. It’s political genius in this race-to-the-bottom presidential event. I promise you. You’re gonna love this one.

USA!USA!USA! USA! OOOh-rah.

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P.S. I remind you that I remain politically neutral in this year’s antagonistic choices. Ronald, Ronald. Wherefore art thou Ronald?

Posted in Humor, KP Veterans | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

New York, New York! La! La! Woof.

Hillary’s Theme

Start spreading the news
I am leaving today
I want to be a part of it
New York, New York

These vagabond shoes
Are longing to stray
Right through the very heart of it
New York, New York

h2

Forget Illinois…and get me the hell out of Arkansas

I want to wake up in a city
That doesn’t sleep
And find I’m king of the hill
Top of the heap

h3

King of the hill…got that Trump.? Top of the Brooklyn heap..got that Bernie? Call me a carpetbagger all you like…Nah na na na na…

These little town blues
Are melting away
I’ll make a brand new start of it
In old New York

If I can make it there
I’ll make it anywhere
It’s up to you
New York, New York

h4

With 291 NY delegates on our side, Bill, we’ll be back in the White House again.

Looking at my previous (guest) post,  https://asknod.org/2016/02/01/states-that-have-sent-presidents-to-the-white-house/ the New York connection seems to be playing a role in this primary season.  A lot of people have dropped out since 2/1/16 when I wrote:

Keeping it very simple, Trump gets 8 points.   Sanders gets 7  points.  Clinton gets 7 points. Cruz gets 3 points–if he’s legal.

Sanders and Trump are native sons of New York.  Sanders childhood home was a 3-room rent-controlled apartment in Brooklyn (LINK); Trump lived 15 miles away in a 23-room house in the Jamaica Estates section of Queens (LINK). Clinton grew up in Park Ridge, a suburb of Chicago (LINK).

The Clinton’s purchased a home in Chappaqua (northern Westchester County) so she could run for Senator in New York.  Immediately after she won, Senator-Elect Clinton bought a house in Washington D. C..

As a native New Yorker, (Westchester County) who lived and went to high school in Manhattan, I can’t view Hillary as a homegirl.  I’m very curious to see how other (true) New Yorkers feel when April 19th rolls around.

There are 247 pledged delegates and 44 superdelegates at stake in the New York Democratic Primary.  Hillary needs a big win in New York to live in Washington full-time.  I suspect she’ll sell her NY house if she attains the presidency–mission accomplished.  If not, I still think she’ll sell and perhaps move to California, maybe near the Clooney’s residence.

April Fools are us?  Maybe!  But there’s no question that we’re all being played–so chill.

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Image: Pixabay

Posted in General Messages, Guest authors, Humor, Uncategorized | Tagged , | 3 Comments

SPRING HATH SPRUNG

Cupcake and I only get to enjoy this visual once a year. Almost from the beginning, the petals begin to fall and the whole effect is lost within ten days. But oh Lordy what a gorgeous ten days. I think they look like those huge Hostess® Snowballs with the creamy cancerous center. photo 1 (4)

photo 4 (3)photo 3 (4)

My only gripe is that if you are going to plant cherry trees, why not plant the real ones with cherries? These Japanese knockoffs are great but they’re all flower and no fruit. Unfortunately, men are not allowed to diagnose landscaping requirements-merely dig the holes and comply. Cupcake explained it thusly: Men’s taste is in their mouth.

Posted in Food for the soul, Independent Living Program, KP Veterans | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

TOP-SHEETING HITS QTC ON AO CLAIMS

downloadGreat. Just what we needed when Vietnam Vets are falling like flies. This is akin to hurry up and pre-deny boots on the ground folks-not to mention Korea/Anderson Is. and any bases stateside. It never ceases to amaze me what VA/QTC et al will do to prevent claims from reaching fruition. When they get busted, no one is held accountable. It’s just an unfortunate mistake and the miscreants will all be counseled such that it never occurs again- well- with that particular disease/ injury.

The track record is one of obfuscation, concealed data, top-sheeted files reviews (as here) and worse. I always like to point to my case and show that VA made every attempt to ignore factual evidence of my presence in Vietnam and points north. You don’t have to deny the disease if you can prove that the Veteran was never there. That really falls into the “absence of evidence is not negative evidence” crevasse. VA uses it to great effect.

Nevertheless, the toll on us continues to rise. It’s now estimated that Vietnam Vets are either dying from disease or their own hand to the tune of over 15 a day. If you drew the short straw with VA and lost, there isn’t much point in soldiering on, apparently. You do have to admire VA for using QTC as the fall guy on this. That is deniability to the Nth degree.

lips

Posted in Agent Orange, All about Veterans, DM II, KP Veterans, Medical News, VA Medical Mysteries Explained, vA news | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

PTSD–IT’S ALL IN YOUR HEAD

635646931319099161-veterans-administration-logoRead this if you ever had any doubts about the C&P Examiners who are independent and open-minded with no preconceived notion of a Veteran having (or not having) a psychiatric disorder that is compensable.

http://myvaeducation.loudunskeptic.com/?view=mosaic

Posted in Medical News, MST, PTSD, research | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Pretty Santa Barbara’s HCV nightmare

Aerial-SantaBarbaraCA10-28-08

Image Credit: By John Wiley User:Jw4nvc – Santa Barbara, California – Own work, CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5618491

HCVAdvocates and other sites have followed the dismal 2015  story of  Dr. Allen Thomashefsky’s medical practice and reopening.  Briefly, as of June 4, 2015, 7 patients were identified with HCV, 5 of whom had received injections on the same day at the doctor’s office. Molecular genetic results confirmed that those patients were infected with the same strain.

The Santa Barbara Dept. of Health didn’t fool around with this outbreak and their report of announced and unannounced visits to the medical office is full of shocking details (LINK). PDF: Inspection Report FINAL 9-28-15.

santa barbara

WHAT NOT TO DO!!! Click image .” The One & Only Campaign is a public health campaign, led by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Safe Injection Practices Coalition (SIPC), to raise awareness among patients and healthcare providers about safe injection practices. The Campaign aims to eliminate infections resulting from unsafe injection practices.”

Anyone who has even a slight awareness of “Standard Precautions,” such as the need for hand washing, dirty areas/clean areas,  multi-dose vials, gloves, safe injections, labeling, environmental cleaning, medical device cleaning, single-use IV bags disposal after use once, will be appalled at the discoveries.  Apparently, the doctor administered injections as illustrated in the graphic: he just changed the needles, not the syringes. He told inspectors that changing a syringe was “overkill.”

The receptionist, reported to be his daughter, (LINK) claimed not to be involved with the procedures but inspectors found that she was very involved.  ASKNOD readers may be upset to read, for example, of how she disposed of patients’ blood and fat in the office kitchen’s sink (page 7). Initially she told inspectors that a locked door led to a storage room.  Later, she opened the room to reveal a bedroom with filled trash bins.  This was Dr. Thomashefsky’s living quarters when he wasn’t working at his Ashland, Oregon office. (One wonders where the bare-handed doctor bathed? Sponge baths in the kitchen sink?)

The office was closed on March 19 due to the infection control breaches but allowed to reopen in the fall, according to an article (9/16/15) in a local paper (LINK).

Needless to say, modern “Standard Precautions” were not being used by the military when tens of thousands of veterans became infected with blood-borne pathogens during their military service.  But that they aren’t be used today in all medical practices, is alarming.  In contrast to the Minot Dept. of Health, the Santa Barbara Dept. of Health did a good job at putting patients’ interests first by releasing a revealing and honest report.  And I expect this practice will be monitored closely going forward.

 

Posted in Guest authors, HCV Risks (documented), medical injections, Medical News, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

ILP–GREENHOUSE COERCION TECHNIQUES

va-approved-greenhouseSo I’m sitting around the barn swamping a stall and I’m thinking to myself “I wonder when them ol’ boys are gonna see fit to come on over and hook me up with a greenhouse.” Hell, I’ve already committed to spring planting. It figures VA would show up with a bulldozer about the time I get the tomatoes in the ground. Smart money said call them up before I commit. 

Being polite as pie, I always couch legal threats in all manner of niceties:

Dear Mr. Boyd,

It has now been almost seven months since the BVA granted my request for a greenhouse. I have heard nothing since my brief communication with Mr. Holloway. Since the VA considers itself proactive and insists it works closely with stakeholders, I am asking you for an update.

I understand each VR&E office is independent from The VACO VR&E in Washington DC. Nevertheless, I can understand why they might want to have a more “hands-on” approach to my grant.

If you can, please update me on the process and where we are with regards to beginning construction on this. In the absence of any input, I have begun my spring plantings. It would be sad to have all that hard work bulldozed out of the way for a new greenhouse due to a lack on VA’s part to communicate in a meaningful way. In the event you are powerless to effect the grant or are being left out of the loop, please give me an appropriate contact name and number to someone who can answer my queries.

If there is anything you are aware of regarding the grant, I would be deeply appreciative of you conveying it to me. I have emailed Mr. Kammerer on the subject and received nothing but silence in reply. Absent any movement on VA and VR&E’s part to enlighten me as to particulars, I will be once again forced to litigate for a timely enforcement of the grant.  I would prefer not to do that. Having an adverse relationship with you is the last thing I desire. Mr. Holloway tells me you are now my Vocational Counselor. I therefore look to you for information and a timeline leading to fulfillment of grant.

I have also copied this to my congressman, Derek Kilmer for a Congressional Inquiry as there seems to be no cohesive plan or guidance from your office or VACO VR&E. I look forward to hearing from you should you choose to comment.

imagesForty five minutes later, I got the commo from VA. I immediately e-mailed Congressman Kilmer back and thanked him for his intercession. Nick Carr, his rainmaker on staff emailed back “We aim to please, Alex. Sorry it took 45 minutes for them to get motivated. They usually respond sooner.” As you can imagine, VA has a storied history with Congressman Kilmer over my neighbor Butch Long and it isn’t all warm and fuzzy.

Mr. Graham,

We do apologize for your inconvenience, your claim is very unusual and we are working to meet all regulatory guidelines in order to provide the services you requested.  I have been working with Kris Hollaway to complete our local requirements and we are now soliciting for an approved Construction Manager to assume responsibility of the project.  I make no excuses, but sometimes when dealing with several government agencies, things do not happen as expeditiously as you would like.

 There are still some steps that have to be accomplished that involve meeting with you.  We would like to meet at the proposed construction site on Tuesday, March 29, 2016 at 11:00 to discuss and complete final paperwork that requires your signature.   Are you available to meet with us at that time.    

 David Boyd

I’m getting a phlebotomy on the 29th so I’d probably agree to a prefrontal lobotomy afterwards I get so loopy. The last thing I want is to read through a complicated legal document designed with multiple trip wires to hamstring my grant. I declined and offer a day earlier (today). Could be they haven’t even typed up the fake greenhouse contract yet so that makes sense. We mutually agreed on the twelfth of April at 1100 hours as GH-day

Considering that any Individualized Independent Living Program (IILP) document is a complex, concise agreement between two parties to provide services with promises made and gifts exchanged, I find it an anomaly that they have a IILP in hand, or soon will, with an agenda I had no hand in creating. This is how those 24 inch by 48 inch greenhouses lit by 20 candlepower heating somehow materialize out of thin air. Thus I find it refreshing that a construction manager is going to be hired. That bodes well for VA to honor my original request I mailed in. It also pretty much says VACO in Washington DC wrote it word for word and Dave and Kris are simply going to be the ring bearers.

downloadNow for the good news. If these turkeys can be rolled so easily by a sharply worded email, have I aimed far too low? This might be a propitious time to put in a request for my very own steakhouse. What the hey. I always had a hankering to own and run a whorehouse too. I really don’t think anyone has yet plumbed the depths of this IL program for all it’s worth.

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What I figured a couple of years back is the VR&E guys had this figured for an indoor Marijuana farm. I assure all of  you that isn’t the plan. This is not my greenhouse. It is all Veterans’ greenhouse. It is a Win or Die attempt to prove any Veteran, given the stamina and enough paper and ink, can prevail with the VA on a program touted as helping us achieve a higher level of independence. If 2,700 severely disabled Veterans are eligible every year and VA cannot fill their quota, I needed to throw my hat in the ring.

Good thing I like to self-actualize. I like that term. It describes that VA itch I can’t scratch.

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Posted in Humor, Independent Living Program | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Despite all the problems, most veterans need the VHA to exist as an improved and inclusive Federal institution

Thank you for the comments to my guest post about the Veterans’ Choice Plan and to Frank for the link to the Gazette editorial. I think that the Tricare idea has merit but are the benefits better or the same as the VA’s? There are a myriad of stupid and wasteful VHA practices but I can think of many reasons why it should not be privatized but rather become more veteran- inclusive, simplified, expanded (Choice Program) and improved. 

For example, during the “Great Recession,” a 40-something moderate-income Navy veteran I know, lost his good-paying job and health insurance.  During his period of unemployment he sought health care at the VA but was turned down because he owned a retirement 401K plan, lived in a mortgaged “upside down” house and owned a car. Six years in the service–including dangerous duty working on nuclear submarines–but the first time he really needed VA health care, he was turned away. What reasonable veteran wouldn’t be bitter about that? He is.

He was also ineligible for state insurance plans. Due to pre-existing health issues, high risk insurance pools were not affordable on unemployment checks.  His COBRA plan was also not affordable and if he drained his 401K, he’d have to pay a tax penalty.  He eventually landed another job 800 miles away, which offered good insurance and affordable premiums, before any medical disaster struck.  But, like millions of other folks, he lost his home in foreclosure during the Wall Street economic debacle.

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Image credit: Kaiser Family Foundation. Click to view slide show that illustrates the problems: Who is Impacted by the Coverage Gap in States that Have Not Adopted the Medicaid Expansion?

Consider the fates of very poor and low-income non-elderly veterans, without a qualifying child, in the 19 states which have not expanded Medicaid.  Like states which tax FOOD, I call them the mean states.  (These are also the states in which the majority of voters vote against their own self interest when it comes to health care.)

Many adult veterans living in these states will have no other viable option for health care if the VA doesn’t have facilities or Veterans’ Choice providers in their locale.  Small businesses employ veterans but finding jobs with any health benefits can be hard because many small employers have been forced to drop health insurance or go out of business.  Big employer/small employer, group insurance or none: vets earning “slave wages” can’t afford their portion of  private insurance premiums anyway so the point is moot. 

When veterans can’t access VA health care, what do their out-of-pocket costs look like? Consumer Reports received grant funding for their retail drug price research (LINK).  Need insulin?  Don’t ask.

drugs

Should veterans be subject to income or asset tests?  No!  No way!  Veterans have earned this benefit yet only some can get medical help when they need it.  Better-off insured vets? The VA bills their health insurance and collects needed income.  Win-win. In rural areas that don’t have waiting lists, why not allow family members/widows with health insurance to access VA health care rather than close facilities?  Help families and get paid.

mccain

John McCain POW 1967-1973

The notion that fraud, waste, and medical incompetence can be eliminated by VA privatization is utopian because corrupt, egotistic and greedy leadership exists in the non-profit and for-profit worlds.  It takes a lot to embarrass anyone these days.  The big cheeses just say/do whatever they want, apologize, and wait for things to blow over.

Getting rich veterans into VA care might actually help a lot!   Sen. McCain is probably eligible for VA care as a former POW (LINK) but I think we would all agree that he should be eligible for VA care regardless of his affluence or SC disabilities.  If Sen. John McCain was a regular patient at the Phoenix VA I think the health outcomes for all veterans would improve markedly.  Maybe ALL Congressional veterans should be required to receive VA health care, at least once a year, in their home states.

Veterans often have different health care needs from those of the civilian populations (Agent Orange. Burn pits? What’s that?); In our experience, many private doctors don’t even ask their patients if they ever served in the military much less understand the implications of who, what, where and when.  My opinion is that we shouldn’t give up on the VHA yet.

 

Posted in All about Veterans, Food for thought, General Messages, Guest authors, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 14 Comments